FLORA OF OXFORDSHIRE. Tit 
7. Thames. Stokenchurch, Hb. Bx. Chinnor, Widley Wood, Queen’s 
Wood, Sunley Wood, near Watlington. 
Berks. Kintbury, Elcot, Brit. 
Is the var. montana, Willd., correctly described in Eng. Bot.? 
A. arvensis, Scop. Parsley Piert. 
Top. Bot. 157. Syme, E. B. iii. 136. 422. Nym. 238. 
Native. Glareal and agrestal. Dry sandy fields, banks, and pastures, 
and on mud-topped walls in and about villages. Rather common and 
generally distributed, frequently attacked by some fungoid growth. A. 
May-Aug. 
First record, Si. 1794. A. aphanes, Leers. 
SANGUISORBA. L. 
8. officinalis, L. Great Burnet. 
Poterium officinale, Hook, J. Top. Bot. 154. Syme, E. B. iii. 132. 
419. Nym. 238. Bx. 269. 
Native. Pratal. Damp meadows. Localandratherrare. P. June- 
August. 
First record, Blackstone, 1737, Sanguisorba major flore spadiceo, J.B. 
2. Ouse. Near Fringford, R. C. Pryor. 
3. Swere. Between Cropredy and Williamscott, towards King Sutton 
by canalside (on Oxford side), Gwil. Hanwell, Bees. Deddington 
Meadows. 
4. Ray. Oddington, Br. Fencott, A. fr. Marston, Rev. R. Linton! 
By the Cherwell near Oxford, H. Bos. Meadows near Upper Hey- 
ford, meadows near Weston Peat Pits; plentiful between Bicester 
and Charlton. 
5. Isis. In Ascot field, and in a meadow near Spilsbury Church, plen- 
tifully, Blackstone MSS. In Ascot field near Wychwood Forest 
Gate, Blackst. Spec. Bot. Do. in Gough, Martyn, ete. Cur- 
bridge Meadow, Witney, Mr. Fardon in Bot. Guide. Binsey, Sib. 
‘A pretty Oxfordshire plant,’ Dr. Goodenough, Bishop of Carlisle, 
Sir J. H. Smith's Correspondence. Yarnton, Wolvercote, H. Bos. 
Charlbury, Minster Lovell, near Eynsham. 
6. Thame. Wheatley, Prof. Daubeny, 1841. Cowley, Iffley, Sib. 
Sandford Meadows, W. 7. Dyer, Journ. Bot. ix. 
7. Thames. Kidmore and Caversham, F. Tufnail. 
Berks. Sandford Meadows, Cumnor, Brit. 
POTERIUM. L. 
P. sanguisorba, L. Salad Burnet. 
P. dictyocarpum, Sp. Syme, E. B. iii. 133. 420. Top. Bot.155. Bx. 
438. 
